F20: Bubble Shooter

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Revision as of 14:00, 4 December 2020 by Proj user7 (talk | contribs) (Technical Responsibilities)

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Abstract

Bubble shooter is an arcade game that has bubbles or balls present on the screen. The bubbles are of different colors and the goal is to clear them by forming a group of bubbles (3 or more) of the same color. Points are earned upon clearing the bubbles and increases with the number of bubbles cleared in a single shot. The player wins upon clearing the screen and loses when the bubbles touch the bottom of the screen.

Objectives & Introduction

Show a list of your objectives. This section includes the high-level details of your project. You can write about the various sensors or peripherals you used to get your project completed.

Team Members

Technical Responsibilities

  • Game Logic Development
Hisaam Hashim, Amiraj Nigam, Anirudh Ashrit, Akshat Bhutiani
  • PCB Design
Anirudh Ashrit
  • LED Display Driver
Hisaam Hashim
  • Graphics Driver
Hisaam Hashim, Akshat Bhutiani
  • Mp3 Decoder Driver
Amiraj Nigam, Anirudh Ashrit
  • Joystick Integration
Akshat Bhutiani
  • Hardware Integration
Amiraj Nigam, Hisaam Hashim

Administrative Responsibilities

  • Team Leader
Hisaam Hashim
  • Git Repository Managers
Akshat Bhutiani & Anirudh Ashrit
  • Code Reviewer
Hisaam Hashim
  • Wiki Report Managers
Amiraj Nigam & Anirudh Ashrit
  • Bill of Materials Manager
Akshat Bhutiani


Schedule

Week# Start Date End Date Task Status
1
  • 10/12/2020
  • 10/16/2020
  • 10/18/2020
  • 10/18/2020
  • Literature Survey of Previous year Projects
  • Submission of Project Proposal
  • Completed
  • Completed
2
  • 10/18/2020
  • 10/20/2020
  • Gitlab Repository Created
  • Wiki Schedule page Created
  • Completed
  • Completed
3
  • 10/20/2020
  • 11/01/2020
  • Read and familiarize with LED Matrix Datasheet.
  • Finalize the Components and place the order
  • Completed
  • Completed
4
  • 11/01/2020
  • 11/10/2020
  • Understand the ball tracing logic
  • Understand the logic for ball queue
  • In progress
  • In progress
5
  • 11/09/2020
  • 11/09/2020
  • 11/09/2020
  • 11/09/2020
  • 11/10/2020
  • 11/15/2020
  • 11/15/2020
  • 11/15/2020
  • Finalize wiki schedule
  • LED Matrix Driver Development
  • MP3 Decoder Driver Development
  • Joystick driver development and interfacing
  • Game logic development
  • Completed
  • Completed
  • Completed
  • Completed
  • In progress
6
  • 11/16/2020
  • 11/22/2020
  • Integration of circuit boards and microcontroller
  • Testing and debugging the game logic
  • PCB Designing
  • In progress
  • In progress
  • In progress
7
  • 11/23/2020
  • 11/29/2020
  • Integrate game logic code with LED matrix
  • Integrate game sounds with game logic
  • In progress
  • In progress
8
  • 11/30/2020
  • 12/06/2020
  • Integrate subsystem
  • Finalizing the video game
  • Update the wiki page.
  • In progress
  • In progress
  • In progress
9
  • 12/07/2020
  • 12/13/2020
  • Address bugs during testing of an integrated system
  • Test pause/play functionality
  • Not started
  • Not started
  • Not started
10
  • 12/16/2020
  • 12/14/2020
  • 12/14/2020
  • 12/14/2020
  • 12/16/2020
  • 12/16/2020
  • 12/16/2020
  • 12/16/2020
  • Final Demo
  • Update Gitlab repo with final code.
  • Update test video.
  • Update the wiki page.
  • Not started
  • Not started
  • Not started
  • Not started


Bill Of Materials

Item# Part Description Part Model & Vendor Quantity Cost
1 Microcontroller Boards SJ2 Boards (Purchased from Preet Kang) 1 $50.00
2 LED Matrix Display RGB LED Matrix Panel - 32X64 1 $55.00
3 Audio decoder Breakout Board MP3 PLayer Shield 1 $26.95
4 Analog 2-axis Thumb Joystick Analog 2-axis Joystick 1 $10.36
5 Power Supply 5V/3A Power Supply 1 $8.99


Design & Implementation

The design section can go over your hardware and software design. Organize this section using sub-sections that go over your design and implementation.

Hardware Design

Discuss your hardware design here. Show detailed schematics and the interface here.

Hardware Interface

In this section, you can describe how your hardware communicates, such as which BUSes used. You can discuss your driver implementation here, such that the Software Design section is isolated to talk about high-level workings rather than the inner working of your project.

Software Design

Show your software design. For example, if you are designing an MP3 Player, show the tasks that you are using, and what they are doing at a high level. Do not show the details of the code. For example, do not show the exact code, but you may show pseudocode and fragments of code. Keep in mind that you are showing the DESIGN of your software, not the inner workings of it.

Implementation

This section includes implementation, but again, not the details, just the high level. For example, you can list the steps it takes to communicate over a sensor, or the steps needed to write a page of memory onto SPI Flash. You can include sub-sections for each of your component implementations.

Testing & Technical Challenges

Describe the challenges of your project. What advice would you give yourself or someone else if your project can be started from scratch again? Make a smooth transition to the testing section and described what it took to test your project.

Include sub-sections that list out a problem and solution, such as:

<Bug/issue name>

Discuss the issue and resolution.

Conclusion

Conclude your project here. You can recap your testing and problems. You should address the "so what" part here to indicate what you ultimately learned from this project. How has this project increased your knowledge?

Project Video

Upload a video of your project and post the link here.

Project Source Code

References

Acknowledgement

Any acknowledgment that you may wish to provide can be included here.

References Used

List any references used in the project.

Appendix

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